ABOUT:

Ordnungswissenschaft is a physical game in which four players are moving stacked boxes according to rigid instructions. The players have to execute these instructions in the given order and can only determine when to execute, not what to execute.

IN OTHERS’ WORDS:

Art historian and curator Sarah Brin wrote about Ordnungswissenschaft:
In the 2007 book Persuasive Games, the designer and philosopher
Ian Bogost posits that video games possess a unique persuasive power.
This power, which he refers to as “procedural rhetoric,” is directly linked
to computers’ core functionalities, particularly their ability to run
processes, execute calculations, and complete rule-based operations.
Bogost argues that video games are especially effective vehicles for
procedural rhetoric because of their ability to impart rule systems by
encouraging players to “think” like a computer. ¹

While some games encourage players to internalize procedural rhetoric
as an incentive to win, Jakob Penca, Marek Plichta, and Till Wittwer’s
Ordnungswissenschaft (Science of Order; 2010) externalizes this
phenomenon by remediating the command-based nature of computer
language through human actions. Like many Fluxus scores, including
La Monte Young’s instruction from Composition 1960 #10 (1960) to
“draw a straight line and follow it,” Ordnungswissenschaft is both played
and performed by following simple instructions. The game itself is entirely
analog, which means that players introduce elements of chaos and
randomness simply by translating Ordnungswissenschaft’s “programming”
into physical movements. As players perform the game, it becomes clear
that there is a distinct separation between human behavior and the
clean, platonic ideals associated with computer logic. The deviations
between the written instructions and their physical manifestation are not
necessarily negative factors, but rather they demonstrate the increasing
influence of human-computer relations and the fascinating tensions that
emerge when organic and programmed elements are combined.